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Implementing the Formative

Assessment Process

The Corunna Public Schools

Story

Michigan School Testing Conference

February, 2015

Session Topics

• What is the formative assessment process and how does it fit into a balanced assessment system?

• How have MDE and Corunna worked collaboratively to build formative assessment practices? What can be learned to apply to your setting?

• What is Corunna learning about the assessment practices in their district?

• What’s next?

Classroom Assessment PracticesFormative – Assessment for Learning

Did the student learn what I just taught them?Teacher - How can I change my teaching tactics?Student – How can I change my learning tactics?

Interim/Benchmark AssessmentsShort-Cycle Summative Assessments

Did students learn the important parts of this unit?

M-STEP/MI-Access/End of CourseSummative – Assessment of Learning

Are students proficient?

Comprehensive Balanced

Assessment System

Aligned to Content Standards

FAME Project Goal

“Working collaboratively, educators will learn,

implement, and reflect on the formative assessment process in order to guide

student learning and teachers’ instructional

practices.”

4

How do we accomplish?

• Learning team model of 6-8 classroom teachers led by a coach/facilitator

• Administrator engagement encouraged

How does FAME define the formative assessment process?

“Formative assessment is a process used by teachers and students during instruction that provides feedback to

adjust ongoing teaching and learning to improve students’ achievement of intended instructional outcomes.”

(CCSSO FAST SCASS Project, 2006)

Training Resources

• F2F Session-“Launching into Learning”

• Formative Assessment Learning Guide

• Access to Online Resources

• Coach Training

• Cognitive Coaching Seminars®

• Adaptive Schools Foundation Seminar

• MDE and FAME Regional Lead Support

FREE!

More FAME Project Information

FAME Project By the Coach Numbers

08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13* 13-14

35 100 63 32

Yr 1 Yr 2+

61 61

Yr 1 Yr 2+

64 96

Yr 1 Yr 2+

100 104

Yr 1 Yr 2+

*10 Regional Lead Team

FAME: Formative Assessment for Michigan EducatorsCoaches and Teams

As of 2014-15

Corunna Public Schools

Corunna, Michigan Our Mission:

TO PREPARE AN

UNPRECEDENTED NUMBER OF

STUDENTS FOR COLLEGE

AND/OR CAREERS,

REGARDLESS OF

DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS.

Demographics• Rural/Suburban District

•Approximately 1,900 students (and falling)

•Approximately 50% of students are economically disadvantaged (and rising)

•Approximately 35% of students are school of choice

•Approximately 14% of students have a disability

•Average of 5-6 sections of 25 students per grade

• Kindergarten & Pre-First building

• 1st-3rd grade elementary building

• 4th-7th grade intermediate building

• 8th-12th grade high school

Our Road to FAME• Year 1 (2011-12)

• Started with Cognitive Coaching (Kristy and MS Asst. Principal)

• Department heads or department head designees

• Completely voluntary (but asked for a commitment)

• 2 meetings per month after school (45-60 minutes)

• Year 2 (2012-13):

• Continued with the same team, but added additional interested staff members

• Classroom visits

• Artifact sharing

• “Bring a Friend to FAME” in May

• MS Principal trained in Cognitive Coaching and Adaptive Schools

Our Road to FAME cont.• Year 3 (2013-14):

• 2 new coaches and 2 new voluntary teams• All administrators and Superintendent begin Cognitive Coaching• Original team collects data from classroom visits (intro to third-point

feedback that feeds forward)• Introduction of FA and FA strategies to volunteer elementary teachers

• 2 meetings/month before school (45-60 minutes)• 25 volunteers

• Year 4 (2014-15)• Half-time formative assessment coach• New administrators begin Cognitive Coaching• 1 new coach (4 total)• 8 teams total (completely voluntary); more than ½ of entire teaching

staff• 2 meetings per team per month (45-60 minutes) before or after school

Growth and Success

• Completely voluntary

• Continued opportunities to grow

• District focus (part of district and building improvement plans)

• Administrators including the superintendent and assistant superintendent are on-board

• Teacher-focused first

• Leading by example

• Celebrating successes

• Sharing the work

Our 5-Year Plan and FAME• Teacher Clarity/FOCUS

• Learning targets• Instructional objectives• You can’t assess or give feedback when you don’t know what you want students to

know/be able to do or what it looks/sounds like when they can• Formative Assessment (FAME)

• Voluntary learning groups• Comprehensive MTSS

• Using formative assessment results of learning targets and instructional objectives to flexibly group students based on need

• Student Involvement • Student self-assessment• Student goal-setting• Peer-tutoring

• Feedback • Teacher to teacher; teacher to student; student to teacher; student to student• Third-point (let the data speak for itself)• Feedback that feeds forward

This year…• ELA and Math Essentials

• Learning targets

• Instructional objectives

• Common assessments

• PLC time

• Talk about essentials/assessment

• MTSS

• Flexible grouping based on formative assessment of LTs

• Student Self-Assessment

• Quick FA to check-in with students

• Standards-based grading (Kindergarten-voluntary)

• Communicating learning targets to parents

Formative Assessment Coach• Comes to the group with big idea/questions

• Follows the group’s needs over the “agenda” (personal or written)

• Asks the hard questions

• Is willing to lead by example and go first

• Encourages others to share

• Creates a safe environment

• Uses strategies that include everyone

Formative Assessment Coach’s District-Wide Role• Voluntary

• Model lessons

• Provide third-point feedback

• Engage in planning conversations

• Engage in problem-solving conversations

• Engage in reflective conversations

• Brainstorming

• Substitute for teachers so they can watch each other

• Coach 5 teams

• Meet with other coaches

• Lead team kick-offs

• Compile/collect/explain data

• Engage in PLCs to ask difficult questions and ensure teacher clarity/focus

How We’ve Changed(not over-night)

Met with ENTIRE staff in grade level and/or departments to show data on WHY we needed to change (two-month period):

- MEAP- ACT - MME- AIMSweb- College Enrollment and Remediation- High School Graduation and Dropout Rate- Academic State Champs (Bridge)- Top to Bottom List- Dibels- DRA- Number of standards to teach…- etc.

How We’ve Changed (not over-night)

PS Element

Power Standard:

Non-negotiable standards (big ideas) that are essential for every student to learn.

1 Students will support a sound argument on important issues/topics using evidence from various sources (using one

or more sources) (verbally and/or written).

2 Students will make inferences and draw conclusions using evidence from various sources (verbally and/or written).

3 Students will analyze conflicting arguments/viewpoints on issues/topics using evidence from various sources (using

one or more sources) (verbally and/or written).

4 Students will develop viable solutions to complex problems with no obvious answers using rationale (verbally and/or

written).

5 Students will speak and write clearly and concisely using correct grammar and mechanics.

6 Students will use and improve life-long reading skills (i.e. vocabulary and fluency).

Determining our “Essentials”

How We’ve Changed (not over-night)

Determining IOs and Learning Targets

PS

Element

IO

Number

Instructional Objective/Learning Targets:

(Big ideas the student must know and/or be able to do)

6 1 Students will develop life-long reading skills.

▪ I can choose an appropriate book.

▪ I can read for pleasure and/or knowledge, both independently and proficiently.

▪ I can be a contributing member of a classroom community (discussing books and recommending books to

others).

▪ I can make plans as a reader. (future books to read, etc…)

▪ I can identify favorite authors/series/genres and explain why.

▪ I can identify the characteristics of eleven genres. (poetry, traditional literature, fantasy, science fiction,

realistic fiction, historical fiction, nonfiction, biography, autobiography, memoir, graphic novels)

▪ I can identify the genre of a text. (poetry, traditional literature, fantasy, science fiction, realistic fiction,

historical fiction, nonfiction, biography, autobiography, memoir, graphic novels)

▪ I can use visible close reading strategies (ie. I can annotate: questions, summaries, connections, reactions,

definitions.; umbrella, KWLH, graphic organizer, etc.)

▪ I can state the main idea(s) of a text.

▪ I can explain how the main idea(s) is supported by key details.

▪ I can write/ask questions relevant to a text.

How We’ve Changed (not over-night)

Posting Learning Targets

How We’ve Changed(not over-night)

Grade Books

How We’ve Changed (not over-night)

Kindergarten Report Cards

How We’ve Changed (not over-night)

MTSS

• Elementary (K-3)• 30 minutes daily K-3 reading• 30 minutes daily math• “All Hands on Deck”• Flexible Groups based on essentials document

•Intermediate building (4-7)•Math Power Hour•Back to back with math class

How We’ve Changed (not over-night)

AIMSweb

Team Kick-offs

• Dinner

•Set schedule

•Create a team poster

•Define formative assessment

•Decide on prospective learning outcomes

•Have fun and laugh

“I am sure many teachers have been using

formative assessment strategies for years

… it becomes so much more powerful when

you are consciously using the strategies

to make decisions about your instruction...

When you really start looking, you won’t

believe you ever taught any other way.” - Ingrid Dettman

- 6th grade ELA teacher

“I cannot imagine what a day in my

classroom would look like that didn’t

involve formative assessment. I use the

feedback I get from my students to make

decisions about what comes next during

the lesson and what will happen the next

day. The students and I are a team –

working together to make sure they get the

instruction they need, when and how they

need it to be successful.”- Ingrid Dettman

- 6th grade ELA teacher

“FAME has directly affected my day-to-day

teaching. My instruction changes because

my students' needs change as they grasp

concepts to mastery at different rates and

times. I am constantly checking to see how

well they have understood a concept and

have avoided the notion of, ‘Well I've taught

it, so they should know it.’”- Mike Windnagle

- 5th grade teacher

“Formative assessment provides me with

the necessary data to know what needs to

be polished and what concepts are

mastered. It gives me the flexibility I need

as an educator to reach all of my students

and to guide them all toward the same goal

at the same time.”- Mike Windnagle

- 5th grade teacher

“I now know that when I teach something,

my students are learning it. My students

are actively engaged in the learning

process. I reteach the skills in the areas

where my students aren't proficient

because I know those skills are essential.”- Katie Stoddard

- 6th grade ELA teacher

“When formative assessment is cognitively

embraced it changes everything. When

teachers realize that grades are just as

much a reflection of their teaching as they

are of students’ learning, shift happens.

When the conversation moves from, ‘What

have I taught them?’ to ‘What have they

learned?,’ that’s a game changer. All of

those ‘gray areas’ become a little more

black and white. Learning becomes the

focus.”- Kristy Walters

- Special Education Teacher

“Formative Assessment has truly helped me

see where and at what depth my students

are learning... These snapshots guide my

instruction. Sometimes we get to our

destination a little bit later rather than

sooner, but we get there. This helps to

ensure that students are ready and

prepared for the summative assessments.”- Sara Golab

- 6th grade science teacher

Contact InformationJohn FattalAssistant Superintendent/Curriculum Director, Corunna Public Schools

jfattal@corunna.k12.mi.us

Kristy WaltersDistrict Formative Assessment Coach and Inclusive Special Education Teacher

kwalters@corunna.k12.mi.us

Kimberly YoungMichigan Department of Education

youngk1@michigan.gov